The widespread phenomenon of polyandry (mating by females with multiple males) is an evolutionary puzzle, because females can sustain costs from promiscuity, while full fertility can be provided by a single male. Using the red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, we identify major fitness benefits of polyandry to females under inbreeding, when the risks of fertilization by incompatible male haplotypes are especially high. Fifteen generations after inbred populations had passed through genetic bottlenecks, we recorded increased levels of female promiscuity compared to non-inbred controls, most likely due to selection from prospective fitness gains through polyandry. These data illustrate how this common mating pattern can evolve if population ...
Given the costs of multiple-mating, why has female polyandry evolved? Utetheisa ornatrix moths are w...
What drives mating system variation is a major question in evolutionary biology. Female multiple mat...
The frequency of polyandry and its ecological (and therefore selective) advantages remain unclear, e...
The widespread phenomenon of polyandry (mating by females with multiple males) is an evolutionary pu...
The widespread phenomenon of polyandry (mating by females with multiple males) is an evolutionary pu...
The widespread phenomenon of polyandry (mating by females with multiple males) is an evolutionary pu...
Multiple mating by females (polyandry) requires an evolutionary explanation, because it carries fitn...
Female mating with multiple males in a single reproductive period, or polyandry, is a common phenome...
Ongoing ambitions are to understand the evolution of costly polyandry and its consequences for speci...
Multiple mating by females (polyandry) requires an evolutionary explanation, because it carries fitn...
Between-individual variance in potential reproductive rate theoretically creates a load in reproduci...
All Tribolium Genotypes This file includes all the genotypes scored as part of this study in GenPop...
When females mate with multiple males, they set the stage for post-copulatory sexual selection via s...
Infertility is common in nature despite its obvious cost to individual fitness. Rising global temper...
Polyandry is often hypothesized to evolve to allow females to adjust the degree to which they inbree...
Given the costs of multiple-mating, why has female polyandry evolved? Utetheisa ornatrix moths are w...
What drives mating system variation is a major question in evolutionary biology. Female multiple mat...
The frequency of polyandry and its ecological (and therefore selective) advantages remain unclear, e...
The widespread phenomenon of polyandry (mating by females with multiple males) is an evolutionary pu...
The widespread phenomenon of polyandry (mating by females with multiple males) is an evolutionary pu...
The widespread phenomenon of polyandry (mating by females with multiple males) is an evolutionary pu...
Multiple mating by females (polyandry) requires an evolutionary explanation, because it carries fitn...
Female mating with multiple males in a single reproductive period, or polyandry, is a common phenome...
Ongoing ambitions are to understand the evolution of costly polyandry and its consequences for speci...
Multiple mating by females (polyandry) requires an evolutionary explanation, because it carries fitn...
Between-individual variance in potential reproductive rate theoretically creates a load in reproduci...
All Tribolium Genotypes This file includes all the genotypes scored as part of this study in GenPop...
When females mate with multiple males, they set the stage for post-copulatory sexual selection via s...
Infertility is common in nature despite its obvious cost to individual fitness. Rising global temper...
Polyandry is often hypothesized to evolve to allow females to adjust the degree to which they inbree...
Given the costs of multiple-mating, why has female polyandry evolved? Utetheisa ornatrix moths are w...
What drives mating system variation is a major question in evolutionary biology. Female multiple mat...
The frequency of polyandry and its ecological (and therefore selective) advantages remain unclear, e...